The @googlechrome team has a major new proposal — the “privacy sandbox” — to try to fix the privacy invasion of online ads without sacrificing the better revenue targeted ads offer publishers. https://t.co/H3SHuNWXZu

I'm really psyched to announce our Privacy Sandbox proposal—an effort to build privacy guarantees into the core architecture of the Web. This has been all-consuming for me over the last six months, and even longer for our research and engineering teams. https://t.co/WWSmcyqkCG

Imagine, if you will, a glorious future where Google, the advertising company known for massive privacy violations, building you a special _private_ Google-controlled web where the icky _bad guys_ can’t track you! Lucky you.https://t.co/Hcyv8j9fmF

Google - plans for building a more private web <“Recent studies have shown that when advertising is made less relevant by removing cookies, funding for publishers falls by 52% on average” ⁦cc @jason_kint⁩ ⁦@johnnyryan⁩ https://t.co/tr0MqEccMg

Google says they want to develop privacy standards for the web. I research and work on security and privacy of web standards for long now. Waiting until they are ready to say more. https://t.co/MT6PEVwws3

the best part about this update from Google is that it begins "Privacy is paramount to us, in everything we do" so at least you can immediately close the tab and quickly move on https://t.co/gXTZoZUNAV

In a classic "right hand" vs "left hand", @googlechrome announced today a new initiative to 'enhance privacy on the web': https://t.co/hkbGfiLoO9 while @google's policy team and lobbyists simultaneously argue that privacy laws are going to destroy the 'free and open internet'

After years of beta-testing their April Fools pranks, Google has decided to release more frequently. I just think it would be funnier to play it straight and not give away the joke in the first sentence. “Privacy is paramount to us, in everything we do.”https://t.co/Uozbn35j7k